TALLAHASSEE — Florida has 12 million registered voters, but the only one named Zakee Furqan stands out.

The 42-year-old Jacksonville landscaper voted year after year until police received a complaint that he used to be Leon Nelson, who lost his right to vote when he was convicted of second-degree murder.

After Furqan left prison, he registered to vote and swore that he was not a felon, records show.

Prosecutors tried Furqan on five felony counts of voter fraud, but the case ended in a hung jury in February after six people could not agree that he broke the law.

The Furqan case illustrates that cases of voter fraud are not only rare but hard to prove. Yet the illusion of widespread cheating by voters continues to hover over democracy like a bogeyman at the ballot box.

This is, after all, Florida, a place still haunted by the 2000 recount with its hanging chad and headache-inducing "butterfly ballot."

Allegations of voter fraud have already crept into the latest presidential campaign in Florida.

In Palm Beach County, the birthplace of the butterfly, Donald Trump cried fraud in the March presidential primary after some voters received ballots without his name and those of other candidates.

More than 2,500 voters showed up for the state's closed party primary, only to discover that they were not registered to vote with a party.

Those voters forgot to check off a party on a voter application form and by law are recorded as having no party affiliation. NPA voters can vote in general elections, but not party primaries.

It wasn't fraud. It was human error — but Palm Beach's most famous resident cried foul.

"Dishonest early voting," Trump tweeted to his millions of followers. "No way to run a country!"

The people who run elections in Florida, elected county supervisors, say the system has built-in safeguards to stop fraud, such as a photo ID law.

"Most voter fraud is stopped because of IDs and the validation process," said Mark Andersen, supervisor in Panama City's Bay County since 2000.

What worries supervisors is Florida's status as a dream destination for many people. Some newcomers register to vote and stay registered in their old state, which means they could deliberately vote twice.

That's voter fraud.

To prevent that, supervisors want Florida to join a national compact known as the Electronic Registration Information Center or ERIC, but the state refuses.

Fifteen states cross-check data so that when people change states and register to vote, a duplicate registration from the old state is flagged for review.

Don Palmer of the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington, D.C., think tank, said Florida is the perfect state to join ERIC, with more new residents and potential new voters arriving every year than any other state.

"It's a very transient state," Palmer said. "Their participation in this sort of data sharing would be extremely valuable."

ERIC claims to have found more than 3.5 million problem voters since 2013, including people who stayed on the rolls after they died, changed states or moved within a state.

Gov. Rick Scott's chief elections official, Secretary of State Ken Detzner, declined requests by the Times/Herald to discuss the subject. His spokeswoman said public records laws block Florida's participation.

"Florida law makes certain voter information confidential, which is in turn precluded from disclosure by a state agency," spokeswoman Meredith Beatrice said.

The confidential information she cited includes a voter's Social Security and driver's license numbers.

However, David Becker, director of election research for Pew Charitable Trusts and an ERIC supporter, said the data is secure.

"When a state joins ERIC, they aren't sharing it with some outside entity," he said. "They are just sharing it, essentially, with themselves."

ERIC doesn't give outsiders access to state voter databases and the data is encrypted.

Florida has had a handful of high-profile cases of voter fraud. It happened in Miami on such a large scale that a judge dethroned the mayor and declared that an election had literally been stolen.

After rampant fraud in a 1997 race for mayor involving paid absentee ballot brokers known as "boleteros," Mayor Xavier Suarez was unseated and replaced with his rival, Joe Carollo.

The Miami case is notorious in its scope.

The statewide trend is a lot less sensational.

During the past two statewide elections, Floridians cast more than 20.7 million ballots. In that period, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement brought 13 voter fraud cases.

Six ended in guilty pleas, including four convicted felons and one non-citizen who voted illegally and a worker for a political vendor who admitted filing phony voter registration forms.

A former Hendry County elections supervisor, Lucretia Strickland, pleaded no contest to using her office to tell someone how to vote.

Two cases were settled before trial. The others are pending or charges were dropped.

The FDLE's biggest case in that period is known as the Madison Nine, in which nine people faced allegations of absentee ballot fraud in a 2011 school board race in Madison County, east of Tallahassee.

Scott suspended the supervisor of elections from office after she was charged with willful neglect of duty. But one by one, every charge against every defendant was dismissed.

Court documents show that the state said "no fraud occurred."

The Madison Nine had become the Madison None.

• • •

Lorraine Minnite, a political scientist at Rutgers University in New Jersey, spent years researching voter fraud and found little evidence that it is widespread.

"It makes absolutely no sense," Minnite said. "There's almost no benefit to an individual voter to commit this kind of crime. The likelihood of one vote changing the outcome of the election is very, very small."

She said it's more likely that a candidate would tamper with an election.

That's what prosecutors say happened in a contest for mayor of Eatonville, near Orlando, last year.

Anthony Grant was elected mayor after getting 42 percent of the vote in a four-person race.

A grand jury indicted him in March on 22 felony counts of voter fraud, alleging that he and two others marked absentee ballots of people who didn't live in Eatonville at the time of the election and that they intimidated voters.

Scott suspended Grant from office a day after the grand jury's findings.

• • •

Though experts say voter fraud is very rare, that hasn't stopped Scott's administration from using it to resist change, a strategy that backfired.

Detzner repeatedly opposed a bill in the 2015 legislative session to give voters the option of registering online beginning in 2017.

Every supervisor of elections favored the idea, saying it would reduce the chance of fraud, but Detzner warned of "forces of evil" that could go online and disrupt elections in Florida.

Detzner's fraud talk stirred such controversy that the Senate waited until this year to confirm him so he could keep his job.

Scott signed the online voter registration bill, and he too invoked fraud.

Prosecutors seldom take allegations of voter fraud to court, but it's not for lack of trying.

Pasco County Supervisor of Elections Brian Corley has sent the county prosecutor three cases of people who allegedly voted in the same election in two states.

"It's not necessarily our top priority, but it's certainly going to be looked at," said Pinellas/Pasco State Attorney Bernie McCabe. "We would take it seriously."

Miami-Dade Supervisor of Elections Christina White said any case of suspected fraud is referred to local prosecutors. But the state attorney's office declined a request for such cases and said it doesn't track them.

In the six months ending June 30, 2015, Detzner's office received 29 complaints. Twenty are under review and eight were dismissed for lack of evidence.

• • •

As for Zakee Furqan, he remains in the county jail in Jacksonville where prosecutors have charged him with two perjury counts, and State Attorney Angela Corey will retry Furqan next month.

"We take seriously a crime that strikes at the very heart of our democratic process," said Corey's spokeswoman, Jackelyn Barnard.

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